The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale - Or, camping and tramping for fun and health by Laura Lee Hope
page 123 of 191 (64%)
page 123 of 191 (64%)
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accept," and he bowed, not ungracefully.
He had the good taste--or was it bashfulness--to go over to a little grove of trees to eat his portion. Grace wanted to take him a cup of chocolate--which they made instead of tea--but Betty persuaded her not to. The girls ate their lunch, to be interrupted in the midst of it by the man who called a good-bye to them as he moved off down the road. "He's going," remarked Amy. "I wonder if he had enough?" "I think so," replied Betty. "Now, girls, we must hurry. We have been delayed, and--" "I'm so sorry," put in Mollie. "It was my fault, and--" "Don't think of it, my dear!" begged Grace. "Any of us might have forgotten the lunch, just as you did." As they walked past the place which the tramp had selected for his dining room, Betty saw some papers on the ground. They appeared to be letters, and, rather idly, she picked them up. She looked into one or two of the torn envelopes. "I wouldn't do that," said Grace. "Maybe those are private letters. He must have forgotten them. I wonder where he has gone? Perhaps we can catch him--he might need these papers. But I wouldn't read them, Betty." "They're nothing but advertising circulars," retorted the Little Captain. "Nothing very private about them. I guess he threw them all away." |
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